Published in:
01-01-2014 | Original Article
Renal sonography with Doppler for detecting suspected pediatric renin-mediated hypertension – is it adequate?
Authors:
Patricia K. Castelli, Jonathan R. Dillman, David B. Kershaw, Shokoufeh Khalatbari, James C. Stanley, Ethan A. Smith
Published in:
Pediatric Radiology
|
Issue 1/2014
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Abstract
Background
Renal Doppler US is used to evaluate suspected vascular causes of hypertension in children, despite mostly unknown diagnostic performance characteristics.
Objective
To evaluate renal Doppler US for detecting vascular causes of hypertension in children with high clinical suspicion of aortic or renal artery narrowing.
Materials and methods
We identified pediatric renal Doppler US examinations performed for hypertension between January 1995 and June 2010 at our institution. We excluded children without follow-up angiography (CT-, MR-, or catheter-based). Two pediatric radiologists reviewed imaging studies and documented relevant findings. Intrarenal spectral Doppler resistive index measurement <0.5 or tardus parvus waveform constituted a positive examination.
Results
Thirty-five boys and 13 girls underwent renal Doppler US and confirmatory imaging (mean age = 9.0 years). Nineteen US examinations were truly negative, two were falsely negative, 18 were truly positive (16 involved narrowing of the aorta or main renal artery) and nine were falsely positive. Sonography had a sensitivity and specificity of 90% and 68%, respectively, for detecting a vascular cause of hypertension.
Conclusion
Renal Doppler sonography reliably detects renin-mediated hypertension caused by aortic or main renal artery narrowing in children. More studies are needed to determine its ability to detect intrarenal and accessory renal artery stenoses.